International Softball Federation President Don Porter tracks his sport's Olympic journey to the day. Today, as he and others present softball's case to be readmitted for the 2016 Olympics to the International Olympic Committee's executive board in Lausanne, Switzerland, the count is at 29 years, six months, 19 days.

Baseball's players' union distributed a memo at spring training camps Tuesday with information about 2003 drug testing, handing out the legal-sized sheets of paper around the time Alex Rodriguez was discussing his use of banned drugs.

Jose Canseco believes he was the only player telling the whole truth about steroids. Now that players he named in his tell-all memoirs have admitted using performance-enhancing drugs or flunked drug tests, Canseco wants an apology from baseball for treating him as an outcast.

Current concerns about the confidentiality of Major League Baseball's 2003 drug-testing results are a far cry from the feelings during a fateful six days that ultimately led to Alex Rodriguez's confession that he used performance-enhancing drugs.

Major League Baseball and the players association refused to confirm or deny a Sports Illustrated report Saturday that New York Yankees star Alex Rodriguez tested positive for steroids in 2003 during an anonymous testing program.